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Putin's Predicament

Image: NBC Things have not been going well for Russia’s horse-riding, bear-wrestling, tiger-hunting president. Scarcely a couple months ago, President Vladimir Putin confidently told business leaders that his country could withstand any economic storm. Now, though, the Russian economy is teetering, and the ruble has plunged.  The ruble’s slide started following the Russian invasion into Ukraine, and the Western sanctions that followed it. In recent weeks though, the bottom has simply dropped off the ruble. At one point, the currency was down fifty percent for the year.  Russia’s crisis was triggered by the plummeting oil price, with crude as much as forty percent off its highs. Russia’s economy failed to significantly diversify: energy exports are responsible for half of government revenue and sixty percent of exports.  Oil was bound to fall. A glut of supply from American shale production coupled with weakening demand from China and other economies was inevitably g

The Myth of Austerity

An anti-austerity protest in Italy "The Myth of Austerity" is the article I wrote for my Freshmen Research Paper in the 2013-2014 academic year, whilst I was in the ninth grade.  Below is the full version of the paper, including citations.  Many thanks to my Freshmen Humanities teacher, Dr. Marty Schmidt, for all his support regarding this paper. Enjoy! *** Yashvardhan M. Bardoloi Dr. Marty Schmidt Humanities I in Action 18 February 2014 The Myth of Austerity          In September 2008, investment bank Lehman Brothers unexpectedly declared bankruptcy (“Case Study”). Its failure sent shockwaves across a globalized economy and “almost brought down the. . .financial system” (“Crash Course”). Fragile “credit markets seized up,” bringing business to a halt (Ferguson 271). The United States entered a two year recession (Business Cycle), and unemployment reached levels unseen since the Great Depression (Krugman, “End This” 4).          Amidst this carna